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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1960)
PAGE 10 A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Friday, January 1, I960 Resolutions For Women Listed By AP Reporter By POPOTIIY ROI2 Associated Press Women's Kililor New Year's resolutions are good for the soul, whether you keep them or not. So litre ar a few I'd like to suggest (or today's women: 1. 1 shall try with all my heart to be fresh, smiling and glamor ous at breakfast. Even if Junior upsets his orange juice. Even if Mary refuses lo eat her eggs. Even if my husband complains about the coffee and goes off in the snow without his rubbors. 1'. I shall endeavor to make my home look like the color pictures in the best shelter magazines, al though how you keep the family from marring the scene with scat tered galoshes, raincoats, snow suits, old newspapers and homo work 1 haven't quite figured out 3. 1 shall attempt never to intro duce an unpleasant subject at the dinner table, even though Suzy spends most of mealtime on the "Just Waited Say - GOHIIAM, N il. (AP) "Wc just made ourselves snug and waited lor help." that was how two young climbers saved their lives when a snowstorm marooned them for four days in a cabin near the tup of 5.32li'foot Mount Madison in the White Mountain National Forest. The storm, blowing since Sun day night, covered the Appalach ian Mountain Club hut with two feet of snow. Richard Bonier, 27, Walcrlown. Mass., and Harold Karnguzian, 25 Cambridge, Mass., graduate stu dents at Michigan Stale University were found in excellent condition Thursday by a search party led by Robert Present!, Lexington, Mass., and Harold Karagozian, 25. server on a day off from his job on the summit of (i,2l!fl-ool Mount Washington. The Presidential Range, of which Mount Madison is a part, has claimed 45 lives in the past century. Most of these were climbers trapped by fierce weath er or by injury. But Bonier and Karagozian, by making themselves snug and waiting for help, cheated the mountains. They said they reiiuircd no med ical attention and immediately started for home in their own cars. Cltll'I'l.l.I) ACTOK N'liDS NEW YORK UPI Polio-crip pled British actor Michael Inland ers, 37, was married Thursday silting in the same wheelchair he uses in the Broadway show "At The Drop Of A Hat." Flanders, and Claudia Davis, 2(i. daughter of a Columbia University profes sor, were married in a civil cere mony at his apartment. telephone and Junior brings a live I log to the table. Even though both brought home report cards marked unsatisfactory, and even though their father said if they couldn't do any better than this why pay all this private school tcition. Why not put them to woik? 4. I shall do my best to remain calm, capable, sweet and forbear ing at all times, even when the electricity goes off right at dinner time and 1 have to finish the beef stew on the back yard barbecue grill. Even when the water pipes Irei-zc and the washing machine goes on the blink, and 1 can't bribe a repairman to come within two weeks. E. 1 shall never indulge in fe male histrionics, even though I do a full-time job at the oflice and then have to come home and get dinner and do the dishes. Even though the children forget to make their own beds or hang up their clothes. Even though my husband converses volubly on the charm and talents of Sally Jones next door, who has no children and in herited income and nothing to do except keep herself beautiful. 6. 1 shall try to live up lo that ideal of the modern woman always extolled in the women's magazines the wonder girl who runs a bril limit career with one hand, a home and family with the other, com niunily activities, social life, PTA politics and artistic hobbies with the third, fourth, lilth and sixth hands and always is fascinating, elaniorous. scintillating and the life of every party, if it kills her. 7. I shall become a gourmet cook, and serve up every meal in true Escoflier style, even though my lamily preiers namnurgers. They should be exposed to the fi ner tilings oi inc. 8. I shall live graciously, comei heck or high water. I shall always have flowers and candlelight with dinner, sunshine and laughter with breakfast and gay companionship with lunch. I shall tie satin bows n the kitchen chairs when life els dull, and make charming ta ble mats out of old bath towels. dyed in my automatic washing machine and embroidered on my automatic sewing machine. 9. 1 shall take advantage of lei sure tunc, gained through modern push button housekeeping, by im proving my mind and getting ac quainted with the higher things of lile, even it 1 have to do it be tween two and four in the morn ing, alter I've finished running the electric dishwasher, putting to morrow's dinner in the automatic oven and miming a list oi me buttons to he pushed the next day 10. When the whole family seems unbearable I shall ask myself how it would be In live without them and things will immediately seem better. P.S. The tenth is probably the only one of these resolutions shall keep. MORTT MEEKLE E f GOODNIGHT, ) HA5 MORTY tjfio f NO, HE SEE SOU TTr ORT. f ANVTHING ABOUT ) ( HADN'T, TOMORROW. )IU N GETTING MARRIED V MOTHER J 7 II AND CETTLINrt S ' ::' ". ' :; . 1 Economists, Merchants Give View Of The Future Cubans Note Anniversary HAVANA (AP) Fidel Castro , ar.d other foreigners, sported a shiny new army dress The group was invited to Hav. uiiform and a big smile at alana by the Cuban Institute of Tourism, trying to lure back Amer ican tourists who have beeen shy ing away from Cuba. At the stroke of midnight, a mil itary band played the Cuban and American national anthems. Castro stood between .Mrs. Jos Louis, wife of the former heavy, weight champion, and French Au thor Claude Faux. New Year's Eve party which co ine'ded with the first anniversary of his revolutionary regime in Cuba. Instead of verbal blasts at the United States and warnings of planned counter revolutionary invasions, the bearded Prime Min ister played the charming host at a banquet for about 50 Americans NEW YORK 'AP) You may work fewer hours, make more money, have more fun in the won derful world of the 1960s. That's how economists and busi nessmen view the future. Their forecasts require, of course, a peaceful decade. Given that, they foresee: Nearly 81 million people em ployed by 1970. It's a little more than 05 million now. A work week averaging about 37'i hours. It's a little more than 10 now. A steady growth in wages with only a little more than 13 per cent of all households having an ncome of less than $3,000. It's 20 per cent today. Prophecies are always hazard ous, ror example: .lust before the Great Depression the Harvard Economic Society concluded no serious recession was likely, and if there were, the Fed- ral Reserve System would take steps to ease the money market m! so check the movement. Professor Irving Fisher of Y'ale, n eminent economist, said just before the stock price break and depression that stock prices had reached "what looks like a per manently high plateau." So, a prudent man will take his predictions with a grain of salt. Nevertheless, men of business and finance are almost unanimous in glowing forecasts for the com ing decade which already has been labeled the "Soaring Sixties," "Suring Sixties" and "Golden Six ties." But some sec the expected period of climb interrupted by re cessions. The Committee for Economic Development says; If we conduct our economic af fairs with intelligence, we can reach a general level of material well being higher than was ever before conceived of as possible Says Mills B. Lane, president of the Citizens S Southern National Bank, Atlanta, Ga., the South- cast's largest banking system: "I expect the, greatest 10 years we have ever had. There will be fluctuations, but I look for very strong forward progress. It will be a decade of terrific technolog ical advance." S. Clark Beise, president of the Bank of America, San Francisco "I share the widely held view that growing population, an expanding labor force, the great increase in family formation, and recent and prospective technological gains will favor general economic growth during the next 10 years.' Ernest B. Marsh, president of the Santa Fe Railroad: "My con fidence in the future of American business and the system under. which we operate is unbounded The trends in growth of population and industry should by W70 pro duce an economy that will cause all previous records of production and employment to appear insignif- cant by comparison." Eastill Hcyser Jr., president of, the Texas Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Assn., Dallas. "Oil and gas producers are betting billions of dollars annually that by 1970 American industry will be using approximately l'i times as much energy as it is today." Secretary of Commerce Freder ick H, Mueller estimates the Gross National Product will hit 500 bil lion dollars by mid-1960. The National Planning Assn estimates that by 1970 the GNP will be 790 billion dollars in terms of the 1958 dollar. It's about 480 billion this year in this year's dollar, about 473 billion in the 1958 dollar. Gerhard Cohn, chief economist of the National Planning- Assn., expects the economic growth rate in the next 10 years to rise 4.2 per cent a year. It averaged 3 per cent in the 1951-59 period. The Committee for Economic Development has figured out that, if the growth rate should average 4 per cent a year, average family income in 1975 would exceed $8,500, after taxes. If the rate is 3 per cent, the income would be $7,500, after, taxes. Automation and electronics will provide a fabulous new world Already an electronic brain is controlling a refining unit of Tex aco at Port Arthur, lex. It is now feasible to run a railroad train without any crew aboard. The steel industry expects to in crease its capacity by 2'i million tons each year of the decade. Its big emphasis will be on foreign markets. Aluminum probably will expand even faster in view of its widening uses. The automobile industry expects to sell 7 ',4 million cars each year by 1970. This year's.' total was around 5,600.000. If you. think streets are crowded now with-58 million cars in use, wait for 1970 and 90 million cars. Gas turbine engines will appear in tt neks but not in cars. There likely will be more passenger cars with engines in the rear. The electric utility industry, which has been doubling in size every 8 or 10 years, is expected to do so again in the next decade. The Bell System, which has 59 million telephones in use, expects to have 93 million by 1969. There will be a lot more people around. Population will total 214 million with a civilian labor force of more than 83'-4 million by 1970. FILM Developing 8-Pielure Roll Jumbo Prints 39' Western Thrift 7th & Main Your present lenses mounted m new, beautiful frames . . . "while you wait" . . . nd at vary little cost, tool Captivating yeframes from the largest collection aver offered in this area. Neweet colors and shape from European and Domestic designers and eraftsmen. Skilled, fashion-wise dispensers to help yov. 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